Brice Catherin

Brice Catherin (born 16 October 1981 in Brussels, Belgium) is a French composer and cellist.

Brice Catherin playing with the BACH.Bow
Brice Catherin
Birth nameBrice Alexandre Catherin
Born (1981-10-16) 16 October 1981
OriginBrussels, Belgium
GenresClassical, contemporary, free improvisation, performance art
Occupation(s)Composer, cellist and performance artist
Years active2005-present
LabelsPan y Rosas, la Cafetière, Insubordinations, Drone Sweet Drone, Absence of Wax
Websitehttp://www.bricecatherin.org

Studies and first professional steps

Brice Catherin studied the cello at the Haute Ecole de Musique de Lausanne (Switzerland) with professor Marc Jaermann (cellist of the sine nomine quartet) where he successfully completed his diploma in 2004. At the same time, he was studying composition at the Haute École de Musique of Geneva (Switzerland) with professors Michael Jarrell, Luis Naón and Éric Daubresse. He received his diploma in 2005. The following year he studied at the Basel Musikhochschule with professor Roland Moser.

2005-2017

During this period, Brice Catherin gave a few hundred concerts and performances as a cellist, a composer, an improviser, and a performance artist in Europe, Japan, Russia, Iceland and Canada as an independent artist. He composed about 80 works for soloists to big ensembles, from 10 minutes to 10 hours. He premièred a few works he commissioned for solo cello or chamber ensembles to composers such as Dror Feiler, Christian Rosset, Evis Sammoutis, Patricia Bosshard, Baudoin de Jaer, Abby Swidler, Jacques Demierre, Arash Yazdani and Ludovic Thirvaudey.

He worked with artists from various backgrounds: dancers (Foofwa d’Imobilité, Corina Pia, Judith Desse...), writers (Karelle Ménine, Cléa Chopard...), actors (Delphine Rosay...), and after works of movie directors (David Bestue and Marc Vives, David OReilly (artist)...) and illustrators (Yuichi Yokoyama...)

As a composer, Brice Catherin wrote more than 80 instrumental works with or without electronic.

As an improviser, he is known for engineering the concept of "improvisation laboratories", which refers to performances of constrained improvisations. The constraints can be as different as "playing an instrument you don't know", "playing a building", "improvise music for a cartoon", "improvisation of characters", or "mixing baroque music and free improvisation".

Own Compositions for Cello with Curved Bow

  • Sequences (2015)
  • Mountain (2015)
  • Winterreise for Cello and Ensemble (2010)
  • Verklärte Nacht for Cello and Ensemble (2012)

Discography

  • 2007 - Opus 69 (with illustrator Baladi, written contemporary music, la cafetière)
  • 2008 - Guns'n'noises (one track with Bristophe for a compilation, limited edition, akouphène)
  • 2009 - Nos meilleurs Stockhausen (live recordings of four of the pieces by Stockhausen Aus den sieben Tagen, insubordinations netlabel)
  • 2012 - Dismissed Frankenstein - Bristophe (Pan y Rosas)
  • 2012 - Winterreise - Brice Catherin (Pan y Rosas)
  • 2012 - Number 3 - Brice Catherin (Pan y Rosas)
  • 2013 - le fils de la prophétesse - Εἰρήνη, Χρόνος (with Bristophe) (Pan y Rosas)
  • 2013 - die ersten zwei Kirchen - Bristophe (Pan y Rosas)
  • 2014 - Super Play Station 3 Turbo : Dada - Brice Catherin (Absence of Wax)
  • 2014 - Early Works - Brice Catherin (Pan y Rosas)
  • 2015 - an die Musik- Brice Catherin (Drone Sweet Drone)
  • 2016 - Sequences - Brice Catherin (Pan y Rosas)
  • 2016 - Best Hits - Brice Catherin (Pan y Rosas)
gollark: Huh? Modern phones mostly have 2.4 and 5GHz, they can't do that off one antenna surely.
gollark: I think modern WiFi stuff uses *multiple* antennas, actually, it's called "MIMO".
gollark: It would also not be very useful for spying on people, since they would just stop saying things if they got a notification saying "interception agent has been added to the chat" and it wouldn't work retroactively.
gollark: One proposal for backdooring encrypted messaging stuff was to have a way to remotely add extra participants invisibly to an E2Ed conversation. If you have that but without the "invisible" bit, that would work as "encryption with a backdoor, but then make it very obvious that the backdoor has been used" somewhat.
gollark: Not encryption itself, probably.
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